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Quote by: mr.perfecto I think you wasted 98% of the time you dedicated to preparing that post. Go eat dinner, see a movie, read something (hopefully non-political so you can avoid further projecting the underlying psychological considerations that inform your political opinions.)
The sincerity of grief is not evidenced by the proximity to the ceremony or how much media coverage is in attendance on the occasion of its expression. In the US, Americans traditionally honor all of the dead after the conclusion of the conflict. Over doing the ceremony or frequent repetitions of it does much to cheap the significance of the event. |
mr.perfecto and georgie porgy would get on very well together. Both are totally compassion-less bastards. It would not surprise me if mr.perfecto sat-out military service together. No man who served his country under fire could be so cruel.
When there was last a soldier's funeral in your area did you "Go eat dinner, see a movie, read something". I doubt if you think at all. Certainly the more you spew the easier it is to show mr.UNperfect you really are. You SIMPLY CANNOT WIN AN ARGUEMENT WHEN DEALING WITH GRIEF!!! That you do not know this shows that you are an empty shell. On this issue, 'Sean' would let me away with forum murder, but there's no need. But there's no need. There's enough emotion and logic on my side to wrap you up in a nice little bundle and leave you out for the binmen. I feel on this like the spider to the fly. Splat. Please come back at me. I'd love to give you a second lesson in humanity.
"I think you wasted 98% of the time you dedicated to preparing that post." If the littlest thing that I could do would go anyway to saving a soldier's life then I would not consider my time wasted. There's no hope for you, so don't start now. It's certain that you would make a bad situation worse. "The sincerity of grief" are fine sounding words, but where's the action. If you pray, do you pray for an end to the war and less deaths or are you still praying for an impossible win and more innocent soldier deaths in an illegal war.
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Spain's King Juan Carlos talks to Defence Minister Jose Bono during a funeral parade at Getafe airbase, near Madrid 
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Spain's King Juan Carlos (2nd R, front) talks to Defence Minister Jose Bono (2nd L, front) as Crown Prince Felipe (R, front) and Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero (L, front) watch during a funeral parade at Getafe airbase, near Madrid, August 18, 2005. Mourning relatives were joined by Spain's King, Crown Prince and prime minister on Thursday for the arrival of the bodies of 17 Spanish peacekeepers killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan this week. The helicopter crashed on Tuesday during an exercise near Herat city in the west of the country. REUTERS/SERGIO PEREZ
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Funeral parade at the airbase.
Two days of morning.